Puerto Rican vs. Hispanic

I was wondering which one is more beneficial in regards to who gets more consideration. Speaking, anyone who is Puerto Rican is considered Hispanic, but I am not sure how Law Schools view the situation? Also, how many points boost would you think we would get if we have went through hardship?

I got a 148. I know it is not good, but for some reason, I am not good at standarized test. I am looking at PT programs in DC area. I have good reccomendations, scholar-athlete, all american and grew up with immense hardship. Any suggestions? At this point, I just want to get into a school.

Go with Puertorriqueno. I had the same problem, although I had to add "Black" to my dilemma (I'm Black, Cuban, and Boricua). "Hispanic," I think, is dominated by Mexican-Americans -- and I would think they are much more heavily represented in law school than we Puerto Ricans. Also, spinning the adversity story will help you only if you can show how it has made you a stronger and better person (and thus, a better potential student) rather than just saying that times were hard and that they should accept you just because.

Puerto Rican will give you a slight advantage over being just "Hispanic", but only if you're a mainlander Puerto Rican (ie: from the States), not an islander Puerto Rican.

At least this is according findings during the Grutter case.

That being said, a 148 isn't going to get you far at all regardless of your background (being hispanic imparts fewer boosts than being of certain other minority backgrounds relatively speaking). You need to work on that hard. Even breaking into the 150's will improve your chances significantly (assuming your GPA is now equally low).

I was wondering which one is more beneficial in regards to who gets more consideration. Speaking, anyone who is Puerto Rican is considered Hispanic, but I am not sure how Law Schools view the situation? Also, how many points boost would you think we would get if we have went through hardship?

Further along those lines, if you are a URM and did NOT experience that much hardship (ie. looking more white so not really experiencing racism against latinos, growing up in a privileged area, etc.), does that negate your URM status?

if you check any catergory that would classify you as urm, it will probably be taken as such at face value--unless you get into specifics on a DS or PS

They'd get more tourists if there weren't so many murders in San Juan. Do we really need PR as a state? I think that we should just cut them loose and let them be their own country. I think that we could put "seven billion dollars" in financial aid to better use within the States. I can't believe that they don't even pay federal taxes.

They'd get more tourists if there weren't so many murders in San Juan. Do we really need PR as a state? I think that we should just cut them loose and let them be their own country. I think that we could put "seven billion dollars" in financial aid to better use within the States. I can't believe that they don't even pay federal taxes.